The Beatles dominated history and memories, but other British groups also have been huge. Clark's band did Ed Sullivan's show 18 times, made a good movie and had eight top-10 singles in the U.S.

This special, rippling with great clips and high-octane music, recalls those times. You could call this self-serving, because it's directed (skillfully) by Clark; still, he didn't conduct the interviews, which bring huge praise from such varied souls as Gene Simmons (of Kiss) and Whoopi Goldberg. Most important is the praise from Bruce Springsteen and his bandmates, plus Tom Hanks' resounding hall-of-fame speech.

TONIGHT'S MUST-SEE II: "Justified" season finale, 10 p.m., FX.

This has been a splendid season, with a bizarre mix of characters. Darryl Crowe and his overwhelmed sister Wendy are superbly played by Michael Rapaport and Alicia Witt. They join her son Kendall, 14, plus bands of nasties from Detroit and Mexico, all lusting for Boyd Crowder's heroin.

Can one hour resolve all of this, plus the prison ordeal of Boyd's fiancé and the shooting of Raylan's boss (which Kendall is trying to take the rap for, to protect his uncle)? Sort of. "Justified" has had a lot of muted moments lately and that continues tonight. Still, it's a solid end to a great year.

Other choices include:

"Dr. Phil," afternoon (check local listings). This is episode No. 2,000, we're told. There have been 15,000 guests, chosen from five million letters. Today, the show looks back at some of them.

"The Mindy Project," 9 and 9:30 p.m., Fox. Last week's fun episode saw Mindy finally nudged toward Danny, the medical colleague who loved her from afar. Now come the complications — his former girlfriend (a drug rep) is back; her idol (played by Anna Gunn of "Breaking Bad") wants to hire her.

"The Goldbergs," 9:01 p.m., ABC. Adam is excited about inviting Dana to his birthday party. Alas, his brother wants him to change it to a make-out party.

"Resurrection," 10 p.m., ABC. After showing just five episodes, "Mind Games" has been yanked from the schedule. Instead, here's a rerun of Sunday's "Resurrection," with Bellamy trying to protect Jacob, while haunted by a past incident in his police days.

Mike Hughes is a nationally syndicated television columnist. Visit him at www.mikehughes.tv.